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About The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1935)
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13. 19?5 B J --------t lB li - B F - S L I 1 ______ The Beaverton Review the home of Mr. ,tud Mis. Fred Goyt, Sunday. Buy Holiday goods Beaverton Drug Store. Mu* Kiloo n Martin is spinUins thte week visiting with Miss Edith Robinson in Portland Mrs. Myrtle Livermore and daugh ter Lois of Portland visited with Beaverton friends, Sunday. Mrs. Doy Gray was hostess for the Friendship Bridge club at her home, Wednesday afternoon Mrs. C. F. Hastings was a diu- ner guest of Mr. and Mis. T. F. Stgrist of Multnomah on Sunday. Mrs. H. F. Waite visited with the A1 Cannons and Art Linbeck homes In Portland Sunday and Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Piggs of La Grande. Ore., visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. I* U Myers. Friday. Mrs. Mabel Adanrs of Portland was an overnight guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H- F. Waite, Wednesday. Mr. Cvlto Topich of Cooper Mt. had two ribs broken in an auto accident on the Canyon road Sun day evening. Mr. and Mrs. Portland were Fred Williams dinner ruerts of at at Brown's adv. Sw ell members of the I new I Kt- Maula club uttended .in interelub meeting with Mnntavilla club Tuss day evening. Miss Veo Noble and Mr. \\ hall«« Dr. aud Mrs. Mason and son Da both of Port Inn,I were vid attended the convert of the no Wat >ou. ted tenor. Marteuelll, Monday eve Sunday guests at the home of Mr* J. W. Huson. Sunday. mug at the public auditorium. Mr. and Mrs, Paul V in e!! ol Mr. and Mis. Eduard Borhig ot la>uta visited over Saturday uiiii North Bend. Ore., are the pi rents Sunday at the home of Mr». |)on of a little son boru Saturday, Dec Fox, mother of Mrs. Ylrrell. ember 7. He has been named W il Mr. aud Mrs. Chaa. Ksslg uie be liam Kay. ing felicitated upon the birth of Mr. aud Mrs. Johu M. Hi'igs ol a little a»n. at the G«n>d San art tan IatGrande were dinner guests Fri hospital. Saturday, December 7. day eveuiug at the L. L Myers Mrs. Floreuce Johnson returned home. They attended the band con Wednesday from a ten days' visit cert later iu the eveuing. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Miss LaMerne Dean will be a I'nderhlll, at Grande Ronde m u tton. member of a two-woman debate Mbs» May Bonott« who 'ms been team representing Kappa Delta so rority in the annual intra-mural conducting evangelistic services at debate tournament at Forest Grove. the local Nazarene church the pasi month closed her meetings Sunday Gifts from the Christu'as sto-e evening. for each member of the family. Do Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Murphy of your Christmas shopping cheaply i ' ouvi ntently aud practically I'tie Stafford were dinner guests at th, Kicbey Hardware * Ku nlture 'o. home of Mr. and Mrs. t'. C. Tripp Friday evening, in honor of M . - Pi id Adv. Tripp’s birthday. Have you been down to the spe Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Kelllngton cial sale of lovely and p-.ictical Christmas gifts for the whole fain ;>nd daughter Joyce and Mr and tly? On sale all tills eomin., week Mrs. Harvey Batchelar. all of Hills at tV Richey Hardwa-c A- I urid boro, were visitors at the R. I). lure Co.— P.’ id Adv * Denney home Saturday evening. A tire Saturday night completely destroyed the house which was the home of the late Mrs. Delia Stitt, at the intersection of Scholls and Johnson Roud southwest of Sylvan. While Baby's Happily ai Ifs Play Mother Rests aria the Washing's Deni Karl Potten, who purchased the Peter Jorgensen greenhouse on l*>m- l*r d street early this fall, hap many lovely potted plants and cut flowers. His establishment is known as the Beaverton Greenhouse Mr. and Mrs. V. A. Wood, and Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Summers at tended the Christmas party of the 1924 Matrons and Patrons of the O- El S. held at the Masonic Tern pie in Portland. Thursday ercnlng. The card party Tuesday evening sponsored by the Rebekuh Needle and Social club was well attended. First woman's prize was won by- Mrs. W. Beattie, second w< men's prize by Mrs. Altishin. first m en - prize by Mr. Wheeler Beattie, and second men's by Charlie Carlson. Mrs. Ed Sheets received the do««, prize. inventors probably nave spent more time devising means for saving labor and exertion than they nave In any other field of ingenuity. 'Make this country an easier place to live in" seems to have been tnelr motto from the time Inventors first began tn- venting Today's washing machines meet the requirements ol modern nouse- wives so completely that women simply take for granted the modern ways for agitatinr the water and drying the clothes ready for the line To a visitor from some other planet, viewing one of our washers (or the first time, it woulo seem to oe the perfectly logical way to home clean liness. And yet persons or other days had other tdeaa Back in 1667. for ex | ample John Highbarger bf Sharps- burg, Md., who surely must have been a worried tamer worked out what ne considered an ideal method to amuse the children of any family, rest the tired mother and get the washing done, all at one and the same time. It was easy! rhe child simply sat on the seat of a rocker mounted on a washtub pulled him self back anc forth and "rocked" the clothes clean. Sunday evening, Mr and Mrs. 1. J. Poirier of Route 1, dossing the highway in an automobile in front of Alexander's Service Station, were struck broadside bv a car driven by Warren Troulman o ' Hu ber. Mrs. Poirier was thrown from the car onto the pavement .and re ceived severe chest contusions, but an X-ray disclosed no frai turel ribs or other injuries. = S = S ^ ^ = = ^ B S S B S S = S S S ^ E S S S S S A V E you heard about the new play, “ Night of January 16” ? There’s an unusual stunt in it, and if you don’t already know about it, I think you’ll be interested. The play itself is laid in a New York court-room, where a beautiful gal is on trial for murder. (The gal is played by a newcomer, Doris No lan, a n d s h e looks like about as good a bet for the movies as this reporter has seen in the past few thea trical seasons.) The jury is right on the s t a g e , and the new an- gle of the play is that at each G e o r g e RAFT perfor m a n c e *3 for Jury duty there’s a brand- new jury— all picked from the audi ence. At the beginning of each per formance a man steps out before the 'audience and says he’s going to call the jurors. He has a list of names. The first two or three are prob ably planted in the audience by the t management to get the thing ‘ started, but the others are just guys who walked up and had to pay for their seats, even as you and I. At the end of the first act, the jury goes out to the jury-room and doesn’t come back till the begin ning of the second act. At the end of the second act, the jury goes out a«rain and stays till the beginning of the third. Finally, the jury hands in a verdict (reached by majority vote), and from then on the play takes one of two directions. It the verdict is “ Guilty,” there’s one end ing. If the verdict is “ Not guilty," t! ire’s an entirely different ending Clever, eh? * * * W ell, the evening I saw the play, I go? the thrill of my life. After the first five jurors (tw o of whom were Maxie Rosenbloom, the fighter, and George Raft) had been nominated and had gone up and taken seats in the jury-box, the gent on the strge yelled, “ Harry Evans!” At least, it sounded to me like he yelled it. I was so doggone dumb- f on riled I just sat there and looked silly. Everybody started to titter, and still I just sat. Then my name was called again and up I walked to the stage, hoping I wasn't being ' it ’^ f'jw lng perfectly vaU H that even the folks in Row Z ot the second balcony couldn't miss all those extra hands and feet I'd sud denly acquired. Being a juryman in that play had its disadvantages You can't join your friends between the acta, aa you have to stay back-stage during the entire intermissions. T o make up for that, the member* of the cast come around and say how-do. There’s lots of kidding For exam ple, the judge wise-cracks in a pseudo-solemn manner. The dis trict attorney, played by the movie actor, Edmund Breese, tells Holly wood stories. And the beauteous defendant and her lawyer try to grease the jurors to let her off. Surprise! Surprise! The night I was there I know that the majority of the jury voted “ Not guilty,” because after all the slips had been turned in I asked the other jurors how they’d voted. So you can fancy my surprise when 1 heard the foreman say “ Guilty” and watched the cast play the “ Guilty" ending. After the play I asked Ed mund Breese how come, and he said it had so happened that during the last week most of the juries had voted “ Not Guilty.” The players didn’t want to get out of practice on the “ Guilty” ending— so they’d decided to play it that way that night no matter how the jury voted! P. S. Yes, we all got paid for our jury duty—three seed* each. • • • H IN G S I didn’t know about in ventors and inventions (and which I learned by reading Harriet Thorndyke’s article in the current issue of , , -x « - ’ — ; -*)'■ Abraham Lincoln invented a device for "buoying ves sels over shoals;’’ Thomas Jeffer son invented the swivel chair; Mark Twain invented a scrap-book; Sen ator William McAdoo once burned his fingers at a picnic on a metal thermos bottle cap-cup, so he in vented one that wouldn’t get hot; Benjamin Franklin first thought of mangles and of bifocal glasses; Jack Johnson, the fighter, invented a monkey-wrench; John Jacob Astor invented a vacuum cleaner for roads; Cornelius Vanderbilt In vented a shoe-thining device the sise of a fountain pen; George Wash ington devised a 16-sided barn; Jim my Durante has trade-marked his N T ball. Saturday. Fairy tew grunge officer. A. M. Nelson Walker meeting. Mis J. Militi r I’ Uutliig Sparc VffoctN Moisluie was the nistalliug The Dalles A riiffeionce in pla’ i Kennedy and Mrs t i eg distance o f «< little ** live also attend«'«! tin feet *|>|>aixMitly Iras e«»us|r!eiah' ' influence on ¿ne am. unit of soli to fruit tree«, Mr. aud Mrs. N. W. Gol bam « I moieture suvailablo my* County Agent W. Wray l.aw Portland, former residents of lieu rence. Soil .«simples were taken this verton, attended the mevtllii, o Ilei summer tn 17 sweat cherry or- ver Chapter No. 106 O.E.8. W .dm day eveuiug. Mrs. Oorhuui returned c'Kaitb', with trees act 30 feet a- recently from a few weeks virit in psrt, the wilting |»>int was reache I Isis Angeles. Eu route she visited • boot August 1, wbiile m bearing with Mr. aud Mrs. Walter Harris orchards with tree» set 40 fast i * at Sacramento. Mr. sud Mrs. Mar- part the wilting point was not rta resided here for a nunihtr of roadbed this Malawi. years when Mr. Ilurrls was naana 1 er of the old S. P. Co. c.ir -hops. Mrs. Vivian Harris Amidon Is cm JOIN NOW ployed in Washington l>C. Mt> Dorothy Harris Is at home Did you ever follow ou after Jtsus to see him in his piay’ ng? There was the first circuit up Nc/rth in Galilee when He cast out the demons and healed a leper. That time when He touched Peter’s w ife’s mother and she sprang up out of her fever and got supper for them. Then the next hour that whole section brought their sick and He stood out in front anu touched them into life agaiD. And next morning a great while before day He went out into a place apart and there prayed. If He needed to pray in His busy life, what about you and me? Then that time when He was in prayer all night and next day chose the Twelve, including Judas who was to betray him. Yes— the alert, polished, business-like Judas with the heart of a thief. Judas never knew why he was chosen but Je sus knew. And again when He took the small boy into partnership with Him. The boy put up five loaves and two small fishes; Jesus put in the God-power and the five thou sand were fed. Right then and there the people would have made Him king. Such feasting! But He left them and went into a moun tain alone and prayed. Was it com passion for men who hungered only for loaves and fishes? Or was it for strength to go to the Cros3 for us? Then Gethsemane. Such agoniz ing and praying there under the shadow o f the Cross as brought great drops of sweat, like blood. And now today In the j?lory, at the right hand of the Father He is able to save us forever and ever who come unto God by him; for He ever llveth to make interces sion for His saved ones. What is your life? Do you go out to be alone in in? Or do you find time to be alone in .irayer? Down to the pit or up to the throne, he travels fastest, who travels alone. Secret sin sends vou down to the pit f« < 'c i;; secret prayer builds you no into godliness fsstest. Christ, verv God of very Cod, took time to p 'lv . “ Rising up a great while before day. He went out and departed into a solitarv place, and there prayed.” Mk. 1:35. Oeo. N. Taylor, Beaverton, Ore. - Paid Adv !W ÉK- NOTICK i*l ' - 1*1 A flue course of Itihlv Hindi«« will he given hy Mrs A. (I. N«i cel at the Huber Coinniarrla' club each Sunday evening, eoninicucliui, IH'cciuhr 16th. at 7:4ft. Theie will lr a song aarvlce at 7:30, All. both old and young, are Invited to eoniv with a llihle, pencil and notebook. For Larger & Hotter lltimhiirgers Come to KAMHKRC. f r >’ ( ’lasses Are Forming Easy Etiquette 1 In Italici, Toe, t c robinie, Spanish, Social tacit is making your com- Ballroom anil Tap Dancing pany feel at home, even though and Adult Reducing liasses you wish they were. The easiest way to climb the so cial ladder is to have your fraud For luforniatioii Inquire at h in aal« father begin at the bottom of It. Hall Thur», and Fri. afternoons All kinds of social knowledge and graces are useful, hut cue of the best is to be able to yawn wit » your mouth closed Boston Trans cript, MARCELLE RKNOUX Day G R A Y ^ NOTARY PUBLIC • IN SU gA N CI IN BIST (BMPANISS VI««« Kellis and Sells Ileal F s ta '» CLASSIFIED AD SECTION ANNOUNCING the Opening of BEAVERTON Greenhouse General Line O f Cut Flower« and Potted Plants We Serve and Deliver Day or Night We Will Specialize In FUNERAL SPRAYS Karl H. Potter B EAVERTO N FLO R IST Phone 0210 Lombard St.. South o f Allen Ave. L is t you r wants - trades - rents - sales - and miscellaneous for only 1 c a word. t'ln».«lfi«‘d Advertising Kate* tire extinguisher«. IDiory Z.'nmii One Cent man. adv If I’uid W hen Ordered For sal«- Six-week-eld i . i \ 11 . (Minimum Price fur flint Goyt. route 2, Box 25. Telephone insertion, 15 cent») I 4051 ...If *'2 : Subsequent Insertions, per word, One Cent H n»t nspeiaeas Biding Charge Ten le n t » In this locality. Will sell for un EXAMPLE If a ten word classl- paid balance. A bargain Easy fi«'d advertisement is inserted, it terms. Write Tallman Plano «tor.-, would cost I5< for one time, 25< 4IG Court., Salem, Ore. c l 'I for two times, 35f for three times, etc. If necessary to send out a . lalenu-nt, an additional cbaigu of Several Houses an«l acreage : racks 10* will be made, for sale or rent. Bank of B«'a- verton. ad vet I I’er Word FOR RKNT FOR S A L E To Beautify your home send to Russellville Nurseries, K. Burn side & 97th Ave., Portland, for catalog, or ph nr TAbor 0804. F'or Kent Good 4-room at! modern house, furnished or unfm nlsheil with full basement ami garage. Corner Third und Watson Ht». Phone i«7M. S, Mii|><--«. .ni » Fur Sale or Trade One Montag range, almost new. The Rlchev Hardware A Furniture Co. FOR TRADE Trade In your old heater on a new Monta« Circulator, the Doest mon Airrushione I ey ran buy. The Richey Hardware It«-«! Comet & Furniture Co. Vm taking rae«MUrement« and llllin,* tor orders shoes. Also Bronson selling Mrs. J. H. Dobbins, Mrs. M. f\ McKercher. and Mrs. W. R. Van Kleek. members of [Jcnterton grange, assisted with the installa tion ceremonies for the Joint insta1- lation of oiTicers for KinKm and Scholls granges, at Kinton grange CHRIST IN PRAYER The Pedonai Touch —— 3 ettei P r in tin g , CHOICE I Vou eat the bread you like best. You like to wear the kind of clothes that you prefer. You furnish your home with pieces of your choice. You read the newspaper that is your favorite. And if you are in business and interested in the develop ment of your community you will spend your money at your own town rather than in some other place. graved Cards P fr o m ^ j t o w HKt* ORDER YOUR XMAS CARDS AND CALENDARS NOW BEAVERTON REVIEW Beaverton’s Home Newspaper